placement that still continues in the anthologies presented to students by scholars with a Modernist bias), but Larkin, who declared Hardy's Collected Poems "the best body of poetic work this century has to show," allotted the most poems in his Oxford anthology to Hardy and acknowledged how the model for his own poetry had shifted to him from Yeats: "Hardy taught me to feel rather than to writeof course one has to use one's own language and one's own jargon and one's own situations and he taught one as well to have confidence in what one felt." Donald Davie, speaking for the poets of this postwar generationseen by the mid-1950s to be "the Movement"thought that "in British poetry of the last fifty years (as not in American) the most far-reaching influence, for good or ill, has not been Yeats, still less Eliot and Pound, not Lawrence, but Hardy ."
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The revival of Hardy's reputation by Larkin and "the Movement" was a reaffirmation of a tradition of interrelated insular and Romantic attitudes quintessentially English : observation over participation, self-absorption over reaching out, withdrawal over involvement, nature over art, simplicity over complexity, the old-fashioned over the modern, naïveté over sophisticationmost of all, the personal voice of a Wordsworth over the impersonal one of an Eliot. During the first two decades of the century these qualities continued to be expressed in work by a group of poets known as the "Georgians," whose models came from Palgrave's English canon; these poets regularly published in popular anthologies entitled Georgian Poetry and edited by Edward Marsh. D. H. Lawrence, reviewing the first volume of 19111912, found it to be a healthy antidote to the nightmare world of early Modernism: "This collection is like a big breath taken when we are waking up after a night of oppressive dreams. The nihilists, the intellectual, hopeless peopleIbsen, Flaubert, Hardyrepresent the dreams we are waking from. It was a dream of demolition."
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To include Hardy among the founders of the movement of intellectual pessimism that stirred in Europe at the turn of the century and continued between the world wars is to acknowledge the disturbing, dark anxiety about the state of civilization that underlies and shapes the best poetry of the twentieth century, both traditional and Modernist. Indeed, expression of a sense of crisis in modern history had begun with Wordsworth's "Preface" to Lyrical Ballads (1800). Fearing that his own violent Age of Revolution, in which "the multitude of causes, unknown
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